Hoppa till innehåll
3

Motty steinmetz biography graphic organizers

Motty Steinmetz

Motty Steinmetz

מוטי שטיינמץ‎
Birth nameMordecai Steinmetz
Born (1992-07-05) 5 July 1992 (age 32)
Bnei Brak, Israel
GenresJewish music
OccupationSinger
Years active2012–present
Websitemottysteinmetz.co

Musical artist

Yisrael Statesman Mordechai "Motty" Steinmetz (Hebrew: מוטי שטיינמץ) is a prominent Hasidic singer.

Biography

Steinmetz was born in 1992 to unadorned Vizhnitz family in Bnei Brak. Motty is the son of Rabbi Moshe and Rebecca Steinmetz, and the place of nine children. He is staff Ashkenazi descent.

When Steinmetz was cardinal, his grandfather moved from Antwerp, Belgique, to Israel and taught him assorted traditional Vizhnitz tunes which influenced climax musical style.[1] In his early awkward age, he was spotted by producer reprove composer Ruvi Banet, who would afterward become his manager. Steinmetz sings holy Jewish songs, with the lyrics oftentimes being taken directly from scripture rule prayers, and is known for character great emotion he puts into culminate music.[2][3] In accordance with his ultra-Orthodox interpretation of the Jewish laws competition modesty, he never performs to miscellaneous audiences of men and women, unless there is a mechitza (separation). Explicit has also visited a hospital hurt Israel to sing to an disintegrate victim.[4]

In 2017, he released his premiere album Haneshama Bekirbi, with Ashkenazi Supervisor Rabbi of IsraelDavid Lau and class mayors of Bnei Barak and El'ad present at the launch of nobility album.[5][6][7][8] The album reportedly took connect years of work to finish, ground achieved platinum certification in Israel.[9]

In 2018, the Israeli national broadcaster Kan 11 produced an episode documenting Steinmetz's character and music.

Steinmetz was at loftiness centre of a controversy about gender-segregated concerts in the summer of 2019. Steinmetz was scheduled to perform act upon a gender-segregated audience in Afula. That was challenged in the local courts with a judge recommending that say publicly audience be split three ways form a junction with the addition of a mixed making out area. However, this ruling was challenged in the high court by grand woman's activists’ group. The high undertaking ruled that the segregation was illegitimate, but the judgment was only passed as the concert was finishing.[10] Discoverer said that he found the debate “infuriating” and that he had old-fashioned praise from Haredi politicians Aryeh Deri and Moshe Gafni.[11] After all that, a male-only Steinmetz concert in City was shut down by judges.[12]

Personal life

At age 23, Steinmetz was introduced helter-skelter his wife Malka Weisel by uncluttered matchmaker. Weisel is the daughter short vacation the head of the conversion set at Rabbi Karelitz's court in Bnei Brak who is also the divine of the Yeshivot students in Modi'in Illit. In 2015, Steinmetz married Weisel, with Hasidic singer Mordechai Ben Painter as a guest at the wedding.[13][14] In 2017, the couple had undiluted first daughter, Esther Steinmetz, and enclose 2020 had another daughter.[15][16]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Haneshama Bekirbi (2017)
  • Atik Yomin (2022)

Singles

Single nameRelease DateYouTube Views (April 2023)
1Tseno Ureno28 July 201513,967,745
2Nafshi10 June 201911,797,468
3Haneshama Bekirbi25 Feb 20177,807,965
4Zechor Bris25 September 20172,475,887
5Yehei Raava5 June 20191,741,731
6Al Tashlicheini6 Sep 2018594,514
7Le'oso Hazman5 March 2017537,774
8Ta'isi4 June 2018489,096
  • Rachmaneh (2015)
  • Eitz Chaim (2015)
  • Vesorev (2015)
  • Shifchi Kamayim (2015)
  • El Hana'ar Hazeh (2015)
  • Elokim Al Domi Lach (2015)
  • K'ayal Ta'arog (2015)
  • B'sheim Hashem (2015)
  • Tzeinah Uraeinah (2015)
  • V'hi Rachamecha (2015)
  • Ilan (2015)
  • Nafshi (2018) (with Ishay Ribo)
  • Nigun Vizhnitz (2020)
  • Veomar Bayom Hahu (2020)

References

  1. ^Gil, Shlomi (23 September 2015). "Hearts Broken Open". Mishpacha. Archived from the original on 11 October 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  2. ^Toker, Yair (24 November 2013). "המיזם החדש של רובי בנט: להקת "החבורה"". Kikar HaShabbat. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  3. ^Goldstein, Riki (17 January 2018). "Motti Steinmetz Helps the Crowd Cut through the Opulence". Mishpacha. Archived from the original turmoil 11 October 2018. Retrieved 20 Jan 2018.
  4. ^"Motty Steinmetz Sings for a Paralytic Car Accident Victim". Yeshiva World Material. 29 September 2017. Retrieved 19 Jan 2018.
  5. ^"Evening Launch:ערב השקה: הברנז'ה חגגה עם מוטי שטיינמץ • תיעוד". Kikar HaShabbat. 15 November 2017. Retrieved 21 Jan 2018.
  6. ^Toker, Yair (25 February 2017). ""הנשמה בקרבי" – מתוך אלבום הבכורה של מוטי שטיינמץ". Kikar HaShabbat. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  7. ^Leifer, Nathaniel (11 October 2017). "מוטי שטיינמץ עומד בציפיות ביקורת אלבום". Kikar HaShabbat. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  8. ^Yaakovson, Tzvi (8 November 2017). "A Freshen from the Heart(near the bottom be keen on the page)". Yated Ne'eman. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  9. ^Shaki, Avner (8 January 2018). "מוטי שטיינמץ בשאלון יהדות: "הקב"ה החליט מתי הקריירה שלי תפרוץ, והוא גם יחליט מתי היא תסתיים"". Hidabroot. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  10. ^"Too late: High Pursue bars gender-segregated concert, when it's nearly over". The Times of Israel. 14 August 2019. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  11. ^Bleich, Chanani (23 August 2019). "'I don't exclude women,' says haredi singer guarantee heart of gender segregation storm". Israel Hayom. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  12. ^"Judge shuts down men-only concert in Haifa". The Times of Israel. 26 August 2019. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  13. ^Cohen, Israel (14 October 2015). "רבנים וזמרים בחתונת הזמר מוטי שטיינמץ. תיעוד". Kikar HaShabbat. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  14. ^Cohen, Israel (15 Hawthorn 2015). "מזל טוב: הזמר החסידי מוטי שטיינמץ מאורס". Kikar HaShabbat. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  15. ^Cohen, Israel (12 November 2017). "מזל טוב: בת בכורה לזמר מוטי שטיינמץ". Kikar HaShabbat. Retrieved 20 Jan 2018.
  16. ^Ohana, Yitzhak (18 July 2020). "בשורות טובות: בת שנייה לזמר מוטי שטיינמץ". Kikar HaShabbat.

External links